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Beatnik

Beatnik: Encyclopedia - Beatnik

The term Beatnik was first coined by Herb Caen in an article published by the San Francisco Chronicle on April 2, 1958. Caen coined the term by essentially Russifying the earlier term, Beat generation. The description beat generation was an earlier label invented ca. 1948 by renowned author, Jack Kerouac. Caen coined the term, beatnik, shortly after the historical launch of the Soviet satellite Sputnik and also at the end of the highly anti-communist McCarthy era of American politics. As such, this was an era of intense ...

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Beatnik, Beatnik - Beatnik Fashion, Beat generation

Beatnik: Encyclopedia - Beatnik



Beatnik

For the computing usage, see Beatnik programming language.

The term Beatnik was first coined by Herb Caen in an article published by the San Francisco Chronicle on April 2, 1958. Caen coined the term by essentially Russifying the earlier term, Beat generation. The description beat generation was an earlier label invented ca. 1948 by renowned author, Jack Kerouac. Caen coined the term, beatnik, shortly after the historical launch of the Soviet satellite Sputnik and also at the end of the highly anti-communist McCarthy era of American politics. As such, this was an era of intense anti-Communist sentiment in the US, and it was apparently Caen's intent to portray the 'beats' of the beat generation in a rather negative light by his turn of the new phrase. Kerouac's earlier term had more positive connotations, associating the beat generation with words like the musical definition of beat, and with the journalistic definition of beat.

Once the term beatnik had been coined, the popularity of its use gradually replaced the earlier term beat generation, even though historians still refer to the earlier term. Since 1958, the term, Beatnik has been used to describe an anti-materialistic literary movement that began with Kerouac in 1948, stretching on into the 1960's. Many historians have asserted that the beatnik philosophy of anti-materialism, combined with its fundamental soul-searching ethos, may have influenced some of the lyrics of popular 1960's musical groups such as The Beatles, and was the precursor of the Hippie generation.

At the time that the term was first coined, there was a trend amongst young college students and struggling writers to emulate writers such as Kerouac and John Clellon Holmes. Emblematic of this new stereotype were men wearing goatees and berets, rolling their own cigarettes, and playing bongos. Fashions for women included black leotards and wearing their hair long, straight, and unadorned. This was a rebellion against the middle-class standards of the time which expected women to get permanent treatments for their hair.

Participants in this subculture also were known to prefer drinking wine rather than the more mainstream beer, and also to use marijuana (if they lived where it was available). This was at a time of extremely strict drug laws in the US. It was also during the 1950s that Aldous Huxley's The Doors of Perception became well-known and further influenced Beatnik views on drugs.

The beatnik philosophy was generally counter-cultural, anti-materialistic, and stressed the importance of bettering one's inner self over and above the importance of bettering one's material standing in the world. Despite the attempts of several mainstream authors such as Caen to imply a connection with communism, there was no direct connection between the Beatnik philosophy (as expressed by the leading authors of this literary movement) and the philosophy of the Communist movement, other than the antipathy that both philosophies shared towards materialism and capitalism. This connection is questionable because of the distinctly spiritual element of the beatnik philosophy, as contrasted with the anti-spiritual views in Marxist philosophy. For instance, some Beatnik writers began to delve into Eastern religions such as Buddhism or Taoism.

Most beatnik politics tended to be liberal; many beatniks supported causes such as desegregation, and an openness to US African-American culture and arts is apparent in beatnik music and literature such as their love of jazz. In this regard, beatniks were considerably ahead of their time given the often strained race relations in American society.

A classic example of the beatnik image is the character Maynard G. Krebs played by Bob Denver on the Dobie Gillis television show that ran from 1959 to 1963. The general beat stereotype also owed something to some of the popular film actors emerging during the early and mid 1950s (for instance, Marlon Brando and James Dean) who had youthful, adventurous, "rebel" images. A sensationalist Hollywood interpretation of the sub-culture can be seen in the 1959 film The Beat Generation, as well as The Subterraneans (based on a Kerouac novel of the same name) and parts of Funny Face.

A more recent example of this stereotype can be seen in the cartoon, Doug: Doug's sister, Judy, dresses and talks in the manner of a beatnik. Yoko Ono is perhaps the most well known beatnik.

Beatnik - Beatnik Fashion

  • black and white striped shirts/sweaters
  • berets
  • baker boy hats
  • ballet flats
  • black stockings
  • sunglasses indoors
  • striped scarves
  • skinny black pants


Beat generation

See also

  • Beat generation

Categories: Social groups | Stereotypes | Subcultures




Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Beatnik", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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